Bishop, Edward. A Virginia Woolf Chronology. Macmillan.
35
Connections Sort ascending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Lady Ottoline Morrell | LOM
's friendships were many and strongly felt. Developed mainly through her salons and other creative associations, they swept in Lytton Strachey
, Virginia Woolf
, Roger Fry
, Joseph Conrad
, T. S.
and... |
Friends, Associates | E. M. Forster | EMF
went up to study at King's College
, Cambridge
. While there, he became a member of the Apostles, and met several future member of the Bloomsbury Group, including J. M. Keynes
, Thoby Stephen |
Friends, Associates | Virginia Woolf | VW
and Katherine Mansfield
first met; before this Woolf had asked Lytton Strachey
to arrange a meeting between them. Bishop, Edward. A Virginia Woolf Chronology. Macmillan. 35 |
Friends, Associates | Edith Sitwell | ES
had many friendships, and there were few notables in the artistic world whom she did not meet. Her friendships were quite volatile, with frequent quarrels, sometimes caused by the practical jokes and the heightened... |
Friends, Associates | Virginia Woolf | Early members of what VW
called Old Bloomsbury (to distinguish the original members of the group from later additions) included Virginia and Vanessa Stephen
, Leonard Woolf
, Clive Bell
, E. M. Forster
,... |
Friends, Associates | Edith Sitwell | Lytton Strachey
wrote caustically about these, but others were much more favourable. Clements, Patricia. Baudelaire and the English Tradition. Princeton University Press. 243 |
Friends, Associates | Virginia Woolf | The cultural production of members of Bloomsbury was prodigious, embracing the imaginative, critical, and political writing of Virginia and Leonard Woolf
, E. M. Forster
, and Lytton Strachey
, the economic theories of Maynard Keynes |
Friends, Associates | Mary Agnes Hamilton | One of Lee's beliefs, pronounced that evening, was: Patriotism . . . is the power to be ashamed of your country. Hamilton, Mary Agnes. Remembering My Good Friends. Jonathan Cape. 74 |
Friends, Associates | Dorothy Bussy | La Souco was visited regularly by all of their Bloomsbury Group friends, among them Lytton
and the other Strachey siblings, the Vanessa
and Clive Bell
, Virginia
and Leonard Woolf
, John Maynard Keynes
and... |
Friends, Associates | Julia Strachey | JS
's lifelong friendship with writer Frances Marshall (later Partridge)
first began when the two were girls together at Brackenhurst
school. Strachey, Julia, and Frances Partridge. Julia: A Portrait of Julia Strachey. Little, Brown. 51 |
Friends, Associates | Virginia Woolf | Thinking of their mutual creative influence and of Fry's place in her family, Woolf surprised herself by grieving even more deeply for Fry than she had for another great friend, Lytton Strachey
, who had... |
Friends, Associates | Rosamond Lehmann | Lytton Strachey
visited RL
and Leslie Runciman
at Newcastle; at this time RL
's future second husband, Wogan Philipps
, was sharing the house with the couple. Siegel, Ruth. Rosamond Lehmann: A Thirties Writer. Peter Lang. 62 |
Friends, Associates | Ray Strachey | After her return from Bryn Mawr in 1909, Ray Costelloe (later RS
) stayed with her friend Ellie Rendel
(whose mother was an elder sister of Lytton Strachey
) at the Stracheys' home in Hampstead... |
Friends, Associates | Dora Carrington | Guests here included some of the women who were to be closest to Carrington until her death: Dorelia John
(wife of Augustus John
, and now a neighbour), writer Rosamond Lehmann
, and Julia Strachey |
Friends, Associates | Rosamond Lehmann | RL
and Wogan Philipps
were constant companions to Lytton Strachey
at his home at Ham Spray, Ipsden, during the last weeks of his life. Lehmann, John. In My Own Time. Little, Brown. 124-5 |
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